CNET has pulled together a gallery of 19 photos that in some way have been rigged, from the composite photo of a British soldier in Iraq published in the Los Angeles Times to the book jacket photo of the "Goodnight Moon" illustrator (his cigarette was removed from his hand).

If you're looking for great examples of how to tell stories on the Web, look here. The site's authors define interactive narratives as "informational and storytelling experiences designed and produced for the web. They leverage great design, visual journalism and rich-media content."

Mark Friesen, a news designer at The Oregonian in Portland, Ore., fills his blog on newspaper design with news developments, trends, even a clip from the Colbert Report when The New York Times shrank its page width.

Robb Montgomery, then an editor at the Chicago Sun-Times, launched this nonprofit "classroom for visual journalism" to teach high school students, college kids and educators about cutting edge techniques. Check out its forums, teaching tools and podcasts.

Poynter was created in 1975 by Nelson Poynter, chairman of the St. Petersburg Times. In 1978, he donated his controlling stock in Times Publishing Co. to the institute, which has become perhaps the industry's largest independent, nonprofit school for journalists.

NewsU.org offers more than 25 courses - most of them free - in several areas, including design, diversity, editing, management and multimedia reporting. NewsU is housed at Poynter and is funded by the Knight Foundation.

The Los Angeles Times photographer, covering the Iraq war, wasn't satisfied with his pictures of a British soldier and Iraqi civilians. If he could just combine two of them .... Poynter's Kenny Irby explains what happened next.